Simon Paskal

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Simon Paskal, Yiddish tenor c. 1910

Simon Paskal (Yiddish: שמעון פּאַסקאַל or סײמאן פּאַסקאַל; February 8, 1877 – October 17, 1930) was a Romanian-born American Yiddish Theater actor and tenor who recorded numerous Yiddish-language discs during the early twentieth century.

Paskal was the son of a blacksmith, and worked for his father as a youth; due to his excellent singing voice he also became a choirboy for Cantor Abraham Osher in Galați.[1] According to his First World War draft registration card Simon was born on February 8, 1877.[2]

During the 1899 anti-Semitic riots in Romania, Paskal left the country on foot (part of the movement called the fusgeyers), eventually arriving in the United States in 1900 according to the Lexicon of Yiddish Theatre, or 1903 according to census documents.[3][1]

By 1904, his wife Sarah had joined him in the United States.[3] He soon became a Yiddish-language singer in New York City's east side, and then became a vaudeville actor.[1] In the first five years Simon and Sarah were in New York, they had two daughters, Pearl and Dorothy.[3]

Musical career

References

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